| | | | | | U.S. | | What you need to know about the coronavirus today | Europe pins hopes on smarter apps European countries cautiously emerging from the onslaught of the coronavirus pandemic are looking to a second generation of contact tracing apps to help contain further outbreaks. The latest apps have big advantages over earlier ones as they work on Apple's iPhone, one of the most popular smartphones in Europe, and do not rely on centralized databases that could compromise privacy.
Global vaccine summit British Prime Minister Boris Johnson hosts a global vaccine summit on Thursday, urging nations to pledge funding for vaccinations against infectious diseases to help the poorest countries tackle the coronavirus crisis. Representatives of more than 50 countries, including 35 heads of state or government, will come together virtually in London to raise funds for the GAVI vaccine alliance, a public-private global health partnership.
'Simplified' Olympics It may be necessary to a stage a "simplified" Olympics next year due to the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak, Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said. The Yomiuri newspaper, citing government and organizing committee sources, said having fewer spectators, making Polymerase chain reaction tests mandatory for all spectators - in addition to athletes and staff - and limiting movement in and out of the athletes' village were among the options Japan would discuss with the International Olympics Committee.
Drive-through Botox Quarantined Florida residents worried about their laughter lines and crows' feet need frown no longer - Botox is back, and it's being offered at a drive-through. On May 4, the U.S. state allowed a partial relaxing of restrictions imposed to slow the coronavirus pandemic. | | | | | | | | Reuters reporters and editors around the world are investigating the response to the coronavirus pandemic.
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We prefer tips from named sources, but if you’d rather remain anonymous, you can submit a confidential news tip. Here’s how. | | | | | | | | | Emerging from lockdown | As the coronavirus jolts Japan, the government’s huge stimulus package has come under fire from hard-hit restaurant owners for channeling funds for items like wagyu beef, melons and tourism rather than accelerating help for firms with burning cash needs. And as the country returns to work from restrictions, its notoriously crowded trains - almost a symbol of its celebrated work ethic - are raising fears about a resurgence of infections. | | When Zinzi Lerefolo was sent home from her fee-paying girls’ school in a leafy Johannesburg suburb in March, her family set up a virtual classroom that allowed her to continue studying uninterrupted. The 13-year-old has access to the internet and her school has the means to provide online teaching during the coronavirus lockdown. For Phuti Ngoetjana, 14, it has been a different story. | | People across almost all the world’s leading rich economies have turned more skeptical about their governments’ handling of the coronavirus pandemic with confidence slumping the most in Britain, a survey showed. In May, in the Group of Seven nations as a whole, 48% of respondents approved of how authorities had handled the pandemic, down from 50% in April and 54% in March, the survey published by polling firm Kantar showed. | | | Covid science | | | | | | | | Top Stories on Reuters TV | | | | | | | |